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  #1  
Old 03-30-2011, 09:56 PM
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LIVE SETTING!!! NEED HELP FOR OUR CHURCH!!!

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HI GUYS,

i am a bassist in our church and we are moving to a bigger place. so i decided to sell my bass amp and cabs.
we are planning to plug all our instruments direct in to the PA.

my question is...

if i use a Direct Box for my bass... what will i need? a good quality PA speakers? or a Subwoofer? what's the difference?

any suggestions?????
THANKS GUYS!!!! GODBLESS!!!
  #2  
Old 03-30-2011, 11:41 PM
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wow...

where to start.

Sincerly... I wouldn't do anything before reading the Yamaha pro sound book cover to cover a few times.

may help you to volunteer to be someone's free roadie for a while.
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  #3  
Old 03-31-2011, 12:19 AM
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Hopefully your church has a dedicated audio engineer or a qualified consultant to handle the transition and design an appropriate system for the new space.

Going to an "ampless" stage is very challenging, especially if you're a bass player. Most churches are looking to attain total control over the volume so putting a bunch of monitor speakers on the stage is almost as counterproductive as having amps on stage. What will likely happen is the players will end up using earphones to monitor.

In terms of equipment, the church should provide you with a standard direct box. If you want any kind of tone shaping you'll need a preamp. I happen to like the Aguilar Tone Hammer but there are numerous options, including Line6 Bass Pods, various rack mount preamps, SansAmp Bass Di's, and the VT Bass pedal. The next thing you should consider is some custom fit In Ear Monitors (IEMs) or at the very least some studio headphones. Normal earbuds struggle to deliver the bass and don't reject ambient noise very well. That means you will struggle to hear yourself and your tone will seem anemic.

I'm personally not a fan of the ampless stage philosophy but it seems the biggest tithers don't like loud music...
  #4  
Old 03-31-2011, 07:44 AM
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If you're going through a PA with no amp, then you'll definitely need a subwoofer or two, and of course you need top speakers too!

There are lots of different systems out there to go for; I'm a Mackie man myself, but that's just my preference.

I'd just also like to mention that 9 times out of 10, guitarists going direct into the board is a Very Bad Idea. At my church I go ampless, while the guitarist uses a small studio amp mic'd up off to one side of the stage. We all use in-ear monitors.

In RE to testing's comment, I agree entirely, but there are some very usable 'bud' type earphones available if you're on a budget. I use Sennheiser IE-4s, and while they aren't perfect, they do the job adequately enough.
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  #5  
Old 03-31-2011, 07:46 AM
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Don't sell your amp. Run a small combo on stage and run an xlr out to the pa.
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  #6  
Old 03-31-2011, 07:48 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by testing1two View Post
Hopefully your church has a dedicated audio engineer or a qualified consultant to handle the transition and design an appropriate system for the new space.

Going to an "ampless" stage is very challenging, especially if you're a bass player. Most churches are looking to attain total control over the volume so putting a bunch of monitor speakers on the stage is almost as counterproductive as having amps on stage. What will likely happen is the players will end up using earphones to monitor.

In terms of equipment, the church should provide you with a standard direct box. If you want any kind of tone shaping you'll need a preamp. I happen to like the Aguilar Tone Hammer but there are numerous options, including Line6 Bass Pods, various rack mount preamps, SansAmp Bass Di's, and the VT Bass pedal. The next thing you should consider is some custom fit In Ear Monitors (IEMs) or at the very least some studio headphones. Normal earbuds struggle to deliver the bass and don't reject ambient noise very well. That means you will struggle to hear yourself and your tone will seem anemic.

I'm personally not a fan of the ampless stage philosophy but it seems the biggest tithers don't like loud music...

THANKS FOR REPLY testing1two!!!!
my question is... do we have to buy a subwoofer for the new setup? or will a regular speaker do the trick???

THANKS AGAIN!!!
  #7  
Old 03-31-2011, 07:50 AM
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Read my post above
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Originally Posted by Relic View Post
That's your masterly-bated fish hook.
  #8  
Old 03-31-2011, 05:48 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mcmon002 View Post
THANKS FOR REPLY testing1two!!!!
my question is... do we have to buy a subwoofer for the new setup? or will a regular speaker do the trick???

THANKS AGAIN!!!
Your new PA system should absolutely have subs. Again, I hope your church is working with an engineer or a qualified consultant to make sure you have an audio system that is appropriate for the new facility. I used to make a decent amount of money fixing & redesigning church systems that were pieced together "in-house." Trust me when I say it's cheaper to do it right than to do it over.
  #9  
Old 04-02-2011, 11:12 AM
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I've only setup 30-50 worship systems.

SUBWOOFER

Quite sincerely you need to RTA a room (spectrum analysis) ...

OPINION - nobody asked what your room is like, staffing, budget etc... recommending subs is premature.. some rooms acoustically won't handle them...

Depending on your exact application, there are tons that run through the mains....
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  #10  
Old 04-02-2011, 11:32 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by testing1two View Post
I'm personally not a fan of the ampless stage philosophy but it seems the biggest tithers don't like loud music...
HA! So true... And most sound guys will turn everything WAY down except for the piano and vocals. I swear I can't ever hear any acoustic or electric guitar, let alone bass, in the mains. You can hear them on stage (well, the musicians don't get a stage, only the vocalists...), but if you move back 15-20 feet... NADA!
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Last edited by saustindavis : 04-02-2011 at 01:29 PM.
  #11  
Old 04-02-2011, 11:52 AM
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There are "tricks" to this "can't hear myself" PM me if you'd like to discuss.

The biggest sound education I had was realizing church sound is closer to recording technique than bar band --- first step is to fight for a worship experience vs "my tone cutting through"

Amazon.com: Yamaha Sound : Books

Unfortunately for church sound it's not as simple as 1 sentance question then 30 replies of uninformed replies.
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  #12  
Old 04-02-2011, 11:57 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ric5 View Post
Don't sell your amp. Run a small combo on stage and run an xlr out to the pa.
This is what I do! I run through a 4x10 (its not up very loud though) an then to the PA via the direct box. It works well as long as you hve a good sound man! Keep playing for Him!
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  #13  
Old 04-02-2011, 12:37 PM
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be carful on the blanket recommendations... some of the largest high tec congregations I play for allow a 10 watt rumble...
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  #14  
Old 04-02-2011, 01:27 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MNAirHead View Post
There are "tricks" to this "can't hear myself" PM me if you'd like to discuss.

The biggest sound education I had was realizing church sound is closer to recording technique than bar band --- first step is to fight for a worship experience vs "my tone cutting through"

Amazon.com: Yamaha Sound : Books

Unfortunately for church sound it's not as simple as 1 sentance question then 30 replies of uninformed replies.
I wasn't just refering to hearing myself, or even when I'm playing. I enjoy being able to hear the bass and guitars even when I'm just a part of the congregation singing. Why have those things if they won't be heard by the church?

I've been a part of churches that do the sound stuff right and everything is natural and balanced even without paying big money for a sound guy. I can think specifically of a church that we attended for a couple of years where I loved being a part of the music team and singing in the pews (well, not pews... chairs) because it was a fun and spiritual experience. They let the musicians be creative and be heard, rather than dictate what they play and how they sound. With that freedom to be ourselves while worshiping we were able to lead the church in a way that was uplifting and moving for all. They would simply control the overall volume of the music, not every aspect of the sound, tone, etc.
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  #15  
Old 04-04-2011, 01:27 PM
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BTDT. But first - get and read this book: CHURCH SOUND - Hal Leonard

Amazon.com: The Ultimate Church Sound Operator's Handbook (Hal Leonard Music Pro Guides) (9781423419709): Bill Gibson: Books

We have a rather crappy sounding Crate combo amp on-stage at our church for use as a bass monitor. The bass typically connects directly to a nice Radial DI, then out 1/4" to the Crate and XLR to the console. We have 2x 2x12 subs, one on each side of the stage. Some bassists crank the Crate up so loud that we cannot add any bass at all to the house - and sometimes it's still too loud for good balance. I bring my own Yamaha PB-1 pre-amp and use it to drive the signal out to the console as my '79 Rick 4001 has a relatively low output level. I also try to leave the Crate OFF and play using only the FOH sound, but, sometimes it's pretty hard to do if Sound Man has the bass down too low for me to hear. I have experimented with putting the sub on my side up onto the stage behind/beside me Vs on the floor next to the stage. We do have a nice 8-ch mix IE system, but no one uses it, we pretty much use wedges, unfortunately, and they really pollute the FOH sound, too bad. Our worship leader really likes to crank up his vocals and git in his monitor to the point that we're at our max db level with NO FOH! This is a classic and constant sound guy Vs musicians battle. Easy to appreciate both positions being a bass player and a sound engineer at the same church. (sometimes at the SAME TIME! Found no easy answers that will please everyone... Pray on it!
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